The weekly Arbitrum (ARB) chart shows a continuous bear trend, with prices printing lower highs and lower lows since the beginning of 2025. The token is trading below the key moving averages: $20, $50, $100, and $200 SMAs – at $0.315, $0.362, $0.547, and $0.655, respectively. An even steeper MA ribbon points downwards, adding weight to the fact that sellers remain in control on the weekly time frame.
Momentum and Bollinger Bands suggest short-term fatigue, as price hovers near the lower band around $0.19–$0.20. Past buy signals in this area produced only short-lived rebounds. Chart downside targets sit at $0.17–$0.18 first, followed by $0.15, with an extreme bearish scenario reaching $0.08–$0.10 if weekly weakness continues, according to current volatility patterns.
Key resistance lies at $0.25, with a strong MA cluster standing between $0.31 and $0.36. It would take a weekly close above $0.36 to transition into a bullish market that could open the door toward $0.55-$0.65. Until such a breakout occurs, any rallies should be considered a corrective bump in the bigger bearish scheme of things, with the trend bias still decidedly downward.
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The weekly RSI is close to 36.6, with its moving average at around 36.9, well below the 50 midpoint and close to the lower boundary. This indicates continued bearish momentum with no penetration of oversold territory. Selling pressure is still relatively strong, although the price has reached a zone where stabilization or a base could form.
MACD readings go negative: The main line is around -0.0656, the signal line is near -0.0584, and the histogram is about -0.0072. All are under zero, signaling bearish momentum. The histogram has stayed negative without any clear contraction, indicating that the downside pressure is still there with no confirmed turn yet.
Dia rebalances the Arbitrum user experience. Gas fees are more consistent. Operators see smoother network performance. Developers have an easier and more familiar onboarding process. The chain is more closely aligned with Ethereum. Daily transactions experience fewer interruptions. Custom chains have more options for tokens. Mobile login feels secure and trustworthy.
The upgrade focuses on actual benefits. Dynamic pricing sets a solid base. Blocks are filled more efficiently. EVM updates from the Fusaka era function properly. Enterprise onboarding is straightforward and smooth. Cross-chain usage of gas tokens is supported. Arbitrum scales without added protocol debt. All parties involved – users, developers, and operators – benefit.
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